Lecture 1 JD Flashcards

1
Q

What are biotic interactions?

A

interactions between individuals and populations which determine the species composition and functioning of habitats, ecosystems and biomes

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2
Q

What is a biotic factor?

A

a living part of an ecosystem –> animals, plants, fungi, bacteria and protists

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3
Q

What is an abiotic factor?

A

physical or nonliving factor that shapes an ecosystem –> temp, light and water

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4
Q

What is the Red Queen hypothesis, and who proposed it?

A
  • organisms must constantly adapt and evolve in order to survive in an evolutionary arms race.
  • Leigh van Valen proposed this hypothesis
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5
Q

What is natural selection?

A

a process that results in the adaptation of an organism to its environment by means of selectively reproducing changes in its genotype or genetic constitution

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6
Q

What are two ways natural selection acts in?

A
  • density-dependent manner
  • density-independent manner
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7
Q

Density-dependent manner

A

the intensity of selection and the rate of mortality increases with increasing population size

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8
Q

Density-independent manner

A

the rate of mortality is uniform irrespective of the population size

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9
Q

What is competition?

A

interaction between individuals brought about by a shared requirement for a resource and leading to a reduction in the survivorship, growth and or reproduction of at least some of the competing individuals concerned

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10
Q

What does density-dependent selection often arise through?

A

through competition among individuals, either as intraspecific competition or interspecific competition

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11
Q

Where does intraspecific competition occur?

A

within species competition

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12
Q

Where does interspecific competition occur?

A

between species competition

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13
Q

Intraspecific competition

A
  • occurs when many individuals try to exploit the same resource
  • results in some individuals contributing less to subsequent generations
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14
Q

What does the self-thinning rule predict?

A

it predicts that plants will decrease in population density (self-thin) as the total biomass of the population increases

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15
Q

The self-thinning rule

A

(look at slides)
- as the population biomass increases, the number of survivors decreases because individual organisms are gaining biomass at the expense of their competitors, and this constant trade-off between abundance and biomass is universal across all plant species

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16
Q

What is carrying capacity ‘K’?

A
  • the number of people, animals or crops that a region can support without environmental degradation
  • the maximum amount/biomass of a species population in a given habitat
17
Q

Mathematical models of population growth

A

look at slides